"Not sure how the yield curve will get back to normal. Ten-year treasuries now all-time low below 1 percent. Fed making emergency cut just panicked market. There’s just not a good ending as the financial ghost of 2008 Lehman Bros are again haunting financials."
I don't mean normal in terms of the rate but rather the slope of the yield curve. Right now it looks like a soggy paper towel with support only at both ends and which is threatening to tear in the middle.
What we used to think of as "normal" interest rates are long gone. I anticipate some sort of Lehman moment in the near future. There are a lot of marginal borrowers out there who are having difficulty servicing their debt.
What does not help is that financial institutions routinely borrow short to lend long. That works as long as the yield curve is in a nice upward slope. When they roll a loan and see that the short term rate is above what they can lend for, they wind up with a money losing loan portfolio.
I don't mean normal in terms of the rate but rather the slope of the yield curve. Right now it looks like a soggy paper towel with support only at both ends and which is threatening to tear in the middle.
What we used to think of as "normal" interest rates are long gone. I anticipate some sort of Lehman moment in the near future. There are a lot of marginal borrowers out there who are having difficulty servicing their debt.
What does not help is that financial institutions routinely borrow short to lend long. That works as long as the yield curve is in a nice upward slope. When they roll a loan and see that the short term rate is above what they can lend for, they wind up with a money losing loan portfolio.
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